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Jessica Biel: 10 Workout Tips

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Us magazine recently talked to Jessica Biel's personal trainer Jason Walsh to garner some workout tips.

I list these here not so you can try and be Jessica Biel - but because the advice is very interesting.

Note: points 6-10 are from Jerry Owens (personal trainer of Rachel McAdams). Emphasis added.

  1. Mix it up
    "I'm a big advocate of recreational sports and stuff. If someone can get out there, even if it's a hike or something like that, just to break up the monotony of going to the gym...I really like that."
  2. Full body exercises
    "We do full body movements. You are pretty much using as many muscles at once, which in turn will jack that heart rate up."
  3. Food choices
    "really organic and clean foods, all natural, like nuts." Also, "an amino acid drink, so that you're not burning up a lot of your muscle, or protein."
  4. Medicine ball
    "Get a medicine ball and do a lunge with a twist while you are holding the ball. Those are great. You are activating so many muscles at once, and you are using those muscles over so many different plains."
  5. Diet
    "Breakfast would be whole grain bread French toast with egg whites and cinnamon. For a mid-morning snack, they'd do a mixed-berry protein shake. Lunch might be sweet potato tuna melt. An afternoon snack might be hummus with celery sticks. Dinner would be spaghetti and meatballs with spaghetti squash and meatballs made of turkey or chicken breast."
  6. On Yoga and Pilates
    "Those are great forms of exercise for stability and balance, but neither one of those is going to change your body dramatically like training with weights does."
  7. Fats
    "The biggest problem is that people are fat phobic. It's clinically proven that we need healthy fat in our diets. You need to eat a balanced diet but not be afraid of fat, like Omega 3 fatty acids like walnuts, olive oil and even coconut oil."
  8. Weight loss and "toning up"
    "blend nutrition, exercise, and physical therapy. The body responds better. People get too wrapped up in doing isolated movement, like being very body part specific."
  9. On Cardio
    "People get too cardio-crazy and need to do more weight lifting," says Owens. He explains that for many people on elliptical machines, "their heart Rate is about the same as if they were shopping around a mall."
  10. Rest and recovery
    "take one to two days off a week: have a massage, make sure you get plenty of rest. The muscles actually change when they're recovering."

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35 Comments

Talia Mana, Centre for Emotional Well-Being

Surprisingly most of that advice is sound LOL. I'm not familiar with medicine balls but I do know that weight training made a significant difference to my fitness and stamina. I need to get back into it...


Reply
mia

i think she gave very good advice. her balanced & satifying diet is also very refreshing. i've just read today about r 'n' b singer rhianna dropping down to a size 2 by consisting on a diet that could only really contain about 500-800 cals a day. a starvation diet basically. jessica looks more toned, healthy and better than her, imo. i'm glad her tips are were published. there needs to be more of this kind of adivce and less of the ones that require you to go hungry. i also like the emphasis on exercise.

Reply
Lose Weight With Me

Truly awesome advice. Those are the same principles that I've used to lose 70 pounds and get into the best shape of my life.

We use a medicine ball with a lot of the conditioning drills we do in my Muay Thai class. I've come to develop a love/hate relationship with it. :-)

Brian

Reply
Jarrett

Wow! Celebrity workout advice that could actually work for real people! I actually agree with everything on the list.

/wants more of this!!!!!

Reply
Entangled

These are pretty impressively good tips, considering they're from US Magazine.

I always wonder about the elliptical machines. I know they're great if your knees can't take the hard shock of running, but they seem to *tell* you you're burning a ton of calories but also make it really easy to slack off and go at an easy rate. I do like to use them for a warm-up before lifting on running off days or, like today, to warm up before running intervals on the treadmill so that there's a bit less stress on my legs. Is there a way to know if you're getting anything resembling a running workout when your hands are too small to get an accurate reading on the HR monitor? (seriously, that thing likes to tell me my heart rate is at crazy things like 36 and 200.)

Reply
TheMorbidMe

Full Body exercise is one of the most important ones. Many people think that just jogging or cycling will do it all. It will, in part, but you need to stimulate all your muscles, this will give you an overall workout and fit condition.

Reply
Jan
Entangled said:
Is there a way to know if you're getting anything resembling a running workout when your hands are too small to get an accurate reading on the HR monitor? (seriously, that thing likes to tell me my heart rate is at crazy things like 36 and 200.)

I don't believe in any of the calorie estimates or imbedded heart rate monitors in machines.

There are 2 ways to get an accurate reading: one, buy a heart rate monitor. I recommend Polar brand. While they have some super expensive ones that do lots of crazy things, I've had an A1 model, which as the name implies, is the simplest one, for 6 years now, and I already got it second-hand (it had a little scratch on the watch part, so I paid less than 50% of the retail price for it) and it has worked great. Other than changing the battery once a year, which any watch repairman can do easily, I've had no problems with it. There are people selling used A1 monitors for as little as $10.

The second way is to try the talk/sing test. To get a good intensity on walking, you should be able to talk, but not to sing. To get a running-like intensity, you should not be able to talk normally, you'd need to pause and catch your breath between words.

Reply
60 in 3

Great tips. I liked the first comment especially. People assume working out has to be a dull affair at the gym, but there are so many fun options out there. Go hiking, go biking, heck, you can even go dancing!

Gal

Reply
tanya

Yeah, the elliptical is not too accurate when it comes to calories, but try not to get too caught up in that. Doing elliptical, treadmill, cycling, etc. is better than doing nothing. I personally never look at the calories, but focus more on time or distance. Working out is also be about improving your health (vO2, metabolism, stamina etc.) and not only about the amount of calories you burn. Like the trainer says mix it up.

Reply
Mark

This is an excellent list. Especially the notes on cardio and fat intake. The only one I'd beg to differ with is yoga/pilates. I have seen these systems transform the bodies of individuals. That said, it's typically most dramatic on people who are fairly slim to begin with. I am an avid weight lifter and proponent of resistance training for everyone, especially women (who tend to avoid it) and anyone wanting to lose weight or see major results.

Reply
Entangled

Thanks for the advice.

I'm of the belief that the elliptical machine calorie counts are horrendously inaccurate (and have a sad but amused laugh at the people who really think they're burning 500 calories in a half hour without breaking a sweat). Whereas when I run, I feel like there's measurable progress. I can run 3 miles now - I couldn't run one 15 months ago. That gives me an even greater feeling of accomplishment than the weight I lost in the process. But I can't run more than 4-5 days a week without starting to hurt myself.

Jan - can the A1 also measure distance (in miles or steps) and/or speed or is that something I'd need to go fancy/to different equipment for? Now that it's starting to get nicer, I've been running outside. Which is fantastic, but I often don't know how far I've gone, or at what pace.

Reply
Jan
Entangled said:
Jan - can the A1 also measure distance (in miles or steps) and/or speed or is that something I'd need to go fancy/to different equipment for? Now that it's starting to get nicer, I've been running outside. Which is fantastic, but I often don't know how far I've gone, or at what pace

It lets you set a training zone, measures the amount of minutes you exercised, gives you the average heart rate, and the amount of minutes you were in your training zone, so you can tell how effective the work out was. It does not however count the steps or the speed. There are lots of cheap pedometers for around $5 that count paces too, and I'm not sure if any of the Polar ones do that. Same for speed. I usually measure a good workout as one where I spent 95% of the time in my training zone (it gives percentages too).

Reply
cg

Man, just looking at that list makes me tired:)
I agree with the recreational sports and hiking stuff though, cos I hate the gym (I'm way too shy).

Reply
Crabby McSlacker

It's kind of funny that we're all shocked when a celebrity's workout program actually makes sense.

Jan, I think you've got some great advice regarding the heartrate monitor. I love the Polar A1 because it's so simple and has so few functions--it means the digits are big enough to read. (And it was cheap).

I'm like you guys too in finding the elliptical readouts are pretty amusing when it comes to calories. I just roughly estimate that if I'm working out as hard, heart-rate wise, on the elliptical as I am when running or walking, that I'll burn a similar number of calories for a half-hour workout. And running calories, depending on your weight, are about 100 per mile if you're 150 pounds. (I think, unless they've changed the estimates since I last looked.)

Reply
Quito
Crabby McSlacker said:

I'm like you guys too in finding the elliptical readouts are pretty amusing when it comes to calories. I just roughly estimate that if I'm working out as hard, heart-rate wise, on the elliptical as I am when running or walking, that I'll burn a similar number of calories for a half-hour workout. And running calories, depending on your weight, are about 100 per mile if you're 150 pounds. (I think, unless they've changed the estimates since I last looked.)

It depends on (**ta-daa!!**) the intensity. If you're a member of a gym or workout club and have an interest in this kind of stuff, ask for a VO2 max test.Reply


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Created / Updated: October 28, 2011

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